Hi Guys,
We live in a somewhat challenging reception area, with the bulk of transmitters around 40 or more miles away. Only 2 transmitters are rated "Good" on Rabbitears.info, with 11 rated "Fair." (The remainder, which we don't try to watch, are rated "Poor" or "Bad.") On TVFool, none of the transmitters are listed as LOS; everything within 50 or so miles is listed as either 1Edge or 2Edge (most 2Edge). However, the terrain and distance aren't the real problem for us, as we have a rotor-mounted Televes DATBOSS Mix LR UHF VHF antenna with supplied preamp roughly 25 feet off the ground.
When winds are reasonably calm -- 0-15 (or so) MPH -- we don't have much signal breakup at all, despite shooting through a lot of trees that are probably at least 50-60 feet tall. But when the winds are 20+ MPH during the warmer months when leaves are on the trees, the signal breakup can be considerable on some stations, with substantial bursts of breakup every few seconds on several stations, interlaced with stable signal for a few seconds in-between.
My thought is that the only way to remedy this would be to mount the antenna on a tower at least 40 feet high, otherwise simply live with the breakups on windy days. (We don't get a huge number of windy days here, but we do get some.) The Televes performs far better than any other antenna we've had, but significant wind and leafy trees can prove a challenge even for it. Do note that we use the rotor to zero in on the stations we're watching (transmitters are clustered in multiple directions), so we are optimizing antenna aim.
Any thoughts on a solution besides jacking the antenna up considerably higher than we have it now?
I figure that a tower mounting is likely the only solution, but I thought I'd see if anyone has any other bright ideas.
Thanks,
Richard
We live in a somewhat challenging reception area, with the bulk of transmitters around 40 or more miles away. Only 2 transmitters are rated "Good" on Rabbitears.info, with 11 rated "Fair." (The remainder, which we don't try to watch, are rated "Poor" or "Bad.") On TVFool, none of the transmitters are listed as LOS; everything within 50 or so miles is listed as either 1Edge or 2Edge (most 2Edge). However, the terrain and distance aren't the real problem for us, as we have a rotor-mounted Televes DATBOSS Mix LR UHF VHF antenna with supplied preamp roughly 25 feet off the ground.
When winds are reasonably calm -- 0-15 (or so) MPH -- we don't have much signal breakup at all, despite shooting through a lot of trees that are probably at least 50-60 feet tall. But when the winds are 20+ MPH during the warmer months when leaves are on the trees, the signal breakup can be considerable on some stations, with substantial bursts of breakup every few seconds on several stations, interlaced with stable signal for a few seconds in-between.
My thought is that the only way to remedy this would be to mount the antenna on a tower at least 40 feet high, otherwise simply live with the breakups on windy days. (We don't get a huge number of windy days here, but we do get some.) The Televes performs far better than any other antenna we've had, but significant wind and leafy trees can prove a challenge even for it. Do note that we use the rotor to zero in on the stations we're watching (transmitters are clustered in multiple directions), so we are optimizing antenna aim.
Any thoughts on a solution besides jacking the antenna up considerably higher than we have it now?
I figure that a tower mounting is likely the only solution, but I thought I'd see if anyone has any other bright ideas.
Thanks,
Richard